North American brackish bear American black bear bear, known as a scientifically American bear, is a North American native bear. Sub-populations such as Ursus americanus luteolu (Louisiana black bears) and Ursus americanus floridanus (Florida black bear) are located in Louisiana and Florida and have a small population. However, North American black bears with a total population of about 600,000 are distributed in Canada and Mexico and have been found in at least 40 states in the United States (Powell, Zimmerman, & Seaman, 1996).
The American black bear (Ursus americanus) is a medium size bear native to North America. It is the smallest, most widely distributed bear species on the African continent. Black bears are omnivorous animals, their diets vary greatly depending on the season and location. They usually live in the forest, but they leave the forest to look for food. Sometimes, due to the immediate supply of food, they are attracted to human society. American black bear is the most common bear seed in the world.
Regardless of whether it is whitened or polar bear, Elf Bear (also known as Kermode Bear) is a white variant of North American Black Bear, which almost entirely appears in Big Bear Rainforest. The area is located 250 miles west of Canada, with huge fog fjords, lush forest islands, and glacier mountains. Grizzly, black bears, wolves, wolveries, humpback whales, killer whales have prosperous along the coasts of indigenous peoples like Gitga'at for hundreds of generations. This is a ghostly, wild, mysterious place: there is a wolf fishing. Swimming The red cedar tree in the western part of the deer has existed over a thousand years ago. There is also a white Asukino bear
Despite living in North America, black bears are not closely related to bears and polar bears; genetic studies have shown that they are separated from the common ancestor (mya) by 550,000 years ago . The Asiatic black bear in America and Asia is considered to be a sister taxonomy, and it is more closely related to each other than bears of other species. According to recent research, Sunbea is also a relatively close category. A small primitive bear called Ursus abstrusus is the oldest known member of the Ursus North American fossil with an age of 4.95 mya. This suggests that U. abstrusus may be a direct ancestor of American black bear, evolved in North America. Walburton and Lyman still believe that U. vitabilis is "a clear pioneer of contemporary Asian black bears", but it is also located in the mainland of the United States.